Originally posted by: JeffreyLebowski
Originally posted by: acemcmac
Originally posted by: LikeLinus
Originally posted by: acemcmac
You are so confused. :laugh:
Credit takes work. Mine is absolutley perfect and what do I have to show for it? About 70k in unsecured credit card lines and a mortgage at 20 years old. I EARNED it. You BLEW it.
I LOVE the credit system

, and so do the rest of us responsible people...
Why would you apply for / receive 70K in credit at 20?
Did you not go to college? Are you in college?
I already graduated, Bachelor's CompSci (econ minor) while working full time. I have an Amex, the Citi Dividend Platinum, an MBNA/BoFA Platinum, A Chase Platinum tier Wawa card, a Kohls card and a Wachovia Platinum card.
FICO used to calculate my mortgage was ~750. I got ~6.0% after the points (which I financed into the loan since the break even point was ~4 years).
My point is that the OP completley missed the point on how credit works and is going to have to do a lot more to repair it than just make payments for a year. You really have to work at it. I couldn't disagree with the OP more. The credit system is AWESOME. You have to learn to play it.
you obviously have never fallen on bad times, or if you have your parents have helped you. Some of us that are responsible do lhave jobs, but one day you show up and the doors are locked and no one can get in.
Sometimes people get in a pickle and their credit suffers.
I went through it myself.
I had a good job making decent money, then I went to work and the company was closed, no notice or warning. Guess what a lot of people are stuck with. Car notes, mortgages and no income. I had some money in the bank, but it wasn't enough. Then you juggle, what's more important, my house, the car, or some credit card bills???? Guess which you don't pay 1st. Yup, credit cards. You call them and explain it to them and they don't care. Guido wants his money, pay up of Vinnie the Thumbs is gonna do more than break you knee caps, he's gonna report you to the credit agencies, so when you do get a job and start paying off the bills you accumulated you get jack hammered in the corn hole on anything credit related for the next 7-10 years.